He was just playing in the garden, same as always. Digging, barking, chasing bees. But then he came back with something in his mouth — muddy, yellowed, sealed with wax.
A letter. From Grandma. At first, I laughed.
Thought maybe he found some old junk. But the name on the front was mine. Inside, it said she’d written a second will.
One nobody else knew about. One where she left everything to me — the house, the land, the savings. Now the rest of them are spiraling.
Calling me a liar. Saying I forged it. My aunt actually screamed in my face, “That damn mutt just cost us our legacy.”
Thing is… I know Grandma meant it.
And I think she wanted me to find it this way. But somehow I felt torn. I didn’t want to fight my family.
I didn’t want to become the enemy. At the same time, Grandma’s handwriting was clear as day. I’d seen her loops, her slants, the way she dotted her i’s with tiny circles instead of dots.
Nobody could fake that. The will wasn’t typed. It was handwritten.
Grandma’s exact phrasing, her old-fashioned expressions. “To my dearest grandchild, the one who always sat with me when the others were too busy, I leave my home, my land, and my accounts. You carry my heart, and I want you to carry my legacy too.”
When I read that line, I froze.
My eyes blurred. I remembered every Sunday afternoon, when she’d sit in her rocking chair by the window and tell me stories about her childhood. I remembered helping her bake bread, watching her hands tremble but never spill the flour.
She always said, “You’re the only one who listens, truly listens.”
And yet, when I showed the letter to everyone, they acted like I was some kind of thief. Uncle Martin laughed so hard he nearly choked on his cigar. “Oh please.
A dog digging up a will? You expect us to believe that?”
Aunt Clara, red-faced, pointed her finger at me like a weapon. “You planted it.
You always were her favorite, and now you’re trying to use it to steal what belongs to all of us.”
My cousin Lydia rolled her eyes and muttered, “Pathetic.”
The more they talked, the smaller I felt. But deep down, I knew Grandma didn’t trust them. She’d seen the way they treated her in her final years — rushing visits, sighing impatiently when she repeated herself, dodging her calls.
I had stayed. I had listened. That night, I couldn’t sleep.
The letter sat on my desk, still stained with dirt from the garden. My dog, Bruno, slept at my feet, wagging his tail in his dreams like nothing had happened. I stared at the ceiling, wondering what to do.
If I fought, I’d lose my family. If I gave in, I’d lose Grandma’s last gift to me. The next morning, they were already on the phone with a lawyer.
They claimed the will was invalid, that it had to be a forgery, that Grandma was too sick to think straight when she wrote it. I kept quiet, listening to them plan how they’d crush me. It stung, hearing my own blood plot against me.
But here’s the twist. Grandma wasn’t senile when she wrote that letter. I had proof.
Two years earlier, she’d handed me a notebook — her little journal. She said, “Keep this safe. Someday it’ll matter.” I never peeked inside until now.
When I opened it, my jaw dropped. On the very last page, written in her same looping script, was a note: “If my first will causes more harm than good, I’ve hidden another. Look in the garden, near the rosebush.
I trust you’ll find it when the time is right.”
I felt a shiver run through me. She had planned this. Down to the detail.
She wanted me to be the one to discover it. I brought the notebook to the lawyer. He adjusted his glasses, read it twice, and leaned back in his chair.
“This changes things,” he said slowly. “It proves intent. Your grandmother wasn’t confused.
She left instructions. This isn’t a mistake.”
When my family heard, chaos erupted. Lydia screamed at me in the driveway, her face inches from mine.
“You manipulated her! You brainwashed her with your fake kindness. You think you’re so special because you brought her groceries and played her silly card games.
Well congratulations, you fooled her.”
Uncle Martin threatened to cut me out of every family gathering. Aunt Clara sobbed, claiming I was tearing the family apart. They all turned their backs.
But then, a week later, something happened I didn’t expect. The lawyer found a recording. Apparently, Grandma had visited his office once after writing the hidden will.
She’d asked him to hold onto a tape, “just in case.” On the recording, her voice was faint but steady. She said, “I love my family, but I know their hearts. They see my estate as money, nothing more.
The only one who truly cares for me, who sits with me even when I’m tired and forgetful, is my grandchild. That’s why I’ve made this decision. It is final, and it is my choice.”
Hearing her voice broke me.
I cried right there in the lawyer’s office. Not because of the money. Not because of the house.
But because she had seen me. Really seen me. When my family heard the tape, their faces fell.
They couldn’t argue anymore. Still, instead of apologizing, they grew colder. Lydia blocked me on social media.
Uncle Martin drove past my house without stopping. Aunt Clara ignored me at the store. I had inherited everything, but I had lost them.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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